QtjC 9tOW$-ltCUieW Published by News-Review Co.. 543 S t. Mala Sr.. RoMbura, Or. Charles V. Stanton ; Editor ' George Castillo Addye Wright : Aniitont Iditor Business Manager jlember of the Associated Press. Oregon Newspaper Publishers - Association, the Audit Bureau of Circulation Entered as .econd class matter May T. 1920 at ,he post office at Roseburg, Oregon, under act of March z, 1873 Subscription Ratei on Classified Advertising Page EDITORIAL PAGE 4 Th. News-Review, Roseburg, TAX DISCUSSION '- By Charles V. Stanton .: Reading; Oregon exchanges would indicate that Hrhatfi is in the makine. Eric Allen, managing editor of the Medford Mail- tribune, Btarted it all by declaring that taxpayers are in . tntP nf rebellion. J. W. Forrester, Jr., of the East bregonian, Pendleton, agreed with Allen, then brought out the comment that we have three "tax horses" property, Income and sales taxes. I was interested in those com mpnts and put in my two-bits worth with the opinion that we should broaden the tax base, and declared that there is little difference between the hy Gov. Hatfield and the suggested sales tax. i Now comes Charles A. Sprague, former Oregon gov ernor, who asserts in the Oregon Statesman, Salem, that ''there is this difference; the sales tax, collected in pen nies is painless, the income tax, collected in dollars, is painful." Rut he made a further statement that "maybe Ave can avoid both a sales tax and heavier income taxes," adding that "Gov. Hatfield thinks we can for another bi ynnitim." Possibly we can avoid a change in our tax system but, it seems to me, we should ask ourselves a question. .Should we avoid either a sales tax or a gross income tax? 3sn't it much better for the State of Oregon to broaden Jts tax base, get more people paying taxes, make conces sions that would get some new business into Oregon, and Stop this movement of industry and business into the state "of Washington? Study Required T. I made the statement that there was little difference between the gross income tax and the sales tax. ' My meaning was that the two probably will correspond closely in the amount of money raised for state purposes, both will come out of income and both will serve to spread Iho tax base. They will bring in a great number of peo ple who now pay little or nothing. ' Study doubtless is needed to determine which form should be adopted. I question which is the more painful, .& sales tax, or an income tax collected by withholding, t One reason people permit federal taxes to be so high js that the federal government collects through hidden ex cise taxes, withholding taxes, and other such means. If 'the taxpayer had to dig hard dollars out of his pocket to pay the cost of our high-riding government, we'd get some economy and fast! - ' It is true that a sales tax, paid a few cents at a time, '3s easier to pay than to lump income tax dollars into an 'annual payment. Rut a gross income tax, in which a levy of one per cent would be placed against the first thousand "dollars of income, would vastly increase the number of people paying state tax, would give more income to the .state and would probably lower the maximums now de manded. Change Is Needed " Oregon's present tax structure is not conducive to cap ital investment in new industry. Statistics indicate that the per capita tax in Oregon Is about equal to other slates, lut the per capita income tax is at the very top. Tax is particularly heavy against tions, and businesses. ' If more people paid taxes, even though the per cent might be low, it would take some of the load off the people ;vith money to invest and would result in more jobs, more Industrial operation and wealth. After all, do you know of any person who avoids a state where he can get a good lob because he might have to The proposed gross income tax, without exemptions, would I believe, approximate, about the same amount as a three per cent sales tax which would allow a number of exemptions and tax only a part of income. Consequently I said that there would be little difference. ". But there would be a tremendous difference, I believe, between a tax system spreading the base and taxing more people as an Influence to industry to settle in Oregon, rath r than moving across the Columbia River as is presently .Observed. Hal Bovle Vacationers Into Human r NEW YORK (AP) If Aris .fotle were suddenly transported through time to a modern Amer ican beach, what would he think? 1 Glancing around at the sands '.studded with sprawling mortals slowly reddening under a hot skv, ne coma reacn only conclusion: one j nat a S rani'P haathnn tl-itin I lhe.se Americans are! Obviously I they are sun wnrshinen. Rut what an odd form their riles lake! "Instead of sacrificing animals. Jhey anoint themselves with oil, lie prostrate and turn themselves into burnt offerings under the ter rible eye of their God. What awful pill has driven them to this in human self-punishment?" - Wise old Aristotle would regard Jhis as a form of cult madness, .and even the most modern pres-TM-day physician would sadly have to agree with his diagnosis. - Comes June and millions of Americans quit chasinu the ri.,1. Jar. and begin a new mnj pur suit a summer lan. Thev turn Jhc country into one vast human I -uariH-cuc pu. Those who can afford to do so po to tho nrarest real beaih. Oth' rrs take off as much clothing as ,the law allows and spreadeagle themselves on the grass u back Jard or public park. Still others climb to their rooftups and slowly tew in their own juices on "tar leach." mil wnerever tne sun shines, lt Jslnnes ' on grub-white limbs and bald pates, on countless inilps nf fitiman epidermis fvnng a rham- .... .Iitnn. PnnnU , I lie in the sun try to apply Instant tcr 08 occuPwi 1 workmen tan from a bottle. rebuilding the rickety old struc- J Tho theory behind this uny facrture. Ore. Wed., Aug. 3, 1960 gross income tax proposed industrial operators, corpora pay a sales tax? in total income to the state, Turn Country Barbecue Pit is that a tan makes a man look more virile, a woman more beau t if ii 1 and both sexes more healthy. But, as any doctor knows, 15 minutes in the sun each day will make Ihe average person as healthy as he needs to be for all practical purposes. And, as any n.ieinnli.i.n L nn.ee Inn m.,nh n posure to the sun will in time make the skin beautiful only to one who admires the patina of old lerther. Two generations ago any re- I sponsible mother would spank a daughter who went out in the sun bare headed and thereby risked ruining her fair complexion. If this mass madness for even deeper tan continues, the verdict of a future anthropologist on American civilization may oe: "They lay too long in the heat of the sun, and all went crazy at once." What this country needs Is sun mers to save us from ourselv nier winters and cloudier sum- Boyle, who recently returned from a vacation, is still peeling from a bad case of aunburn. Macmillan Moves Out LONDON (AP) Prime Minis ter Harold Marmillan started mov ing out of No. 10 Downing St. For the next two years the official res idence of Britain'! Prime Minis- In The Day's News iBy FRANK In a study entitled The Investors i er, lomorrow, &eun runsion, lis president, says the .New York Stock Exchange has made great progress in the past five years in spreading share ownership but, he adds, a great gap still exists in the public's knowledge and under standing in this field. He goes on to say: "While many people understand some of the advantages of owning j buy some of its stock You then! stock, only one adult out of foursome one of the OWNERS. If j can adequately define common; stock this lack of knowledge on the part of so many people is a critically inhibiting lactor in the growth of share ownership." Hmmmmmm. One suspects that what Mr. Fun- ston is saying, in guarded and cautious and carefully disinfected language, is that too many people (meaning, of course, uninformed people) look upon the nation's stock exchanges, of which the New uui uitru York exchange is the best known, as legalized brothers of Nevada's gambling casinos and tend to think of stock buying and selling as a respectable substitute for shooting craps. Nothing, of course rnulH h I farther from the truth. As a mat- ter of fact, ownership of stock of our great 'modern industrial co, ' j porauons is a sensib e, practical! modern form of socialism The dictionary definition of so cialism is: "A political and economic theory of social organi- j zauon based on collective govern- mental ownership and democratic ! ""-: ' ' . j ' . means for the production and dis tribution of goods. The encyclopedia definition goes.lo become an owner of shares nf, n imc imiiitri, utriuuiiK BUCIdUMIl as "both a doctrine and a move-lis to STUDY carefully the busi ment which seeks to place in thelness of buying shares of stock. If hands of the people, either 1)1- iii-.LU.Y or through their govern- ment, the ownership and control1 John Scali Doug Dillon Is Backstage Choice For Sec Of State WASHINGTON (AP) Douglas . Dillon, 50, a fellow who talks tough to the Soviet Union, hut softly to Congress, seems to be the backstage favorite for the job of secretary of slate if Vice President Richard M. Nixon is elected president, Neither Nixon, the Republican standard bearer, nor Sen. John F. Kennedy, the Democratic presi dential nominee, have given solid clues on choices for the tap cab inet post. But Kennedy has two leading prospects in Chester Bowles and Adlai E. Stevenson, his foreign policy advisors. Nixon could always turn to some dark horse candidate as his selection. But lately in Republican circles, the name of Dillon, the State Department's No. 2 man, has been bobbing up in informal surveys. Dillon, a millionaire former in vestment banker, is mentioned more frequently than former New York Gov. Thomas E. Dewey who might he available as Nixon's foreign policy chief, if asked. Dillon assets are readily appar ent. He would be far less contro versial than Dewey who has voiced some biting criticism of Democrats. For 7!a years Dillon has worked in the State Depart- U.S. Base Debate Topic Forbidden Italy Reds LEGHORN. Italy (AP) The Coinmiinisl'Socialit majority on Leghorn's City Council has been told it cannot debate whether a V. S. military base here endangers this port city's security. The In terior Ministry ruled the issue was a matter of national jurisdiction. The Cartoonist Says: "Lucky It's Close ByRight in the Firehouse" JENKINS i of the principal means of produc uon ana autxiDulion. What is a corporation? The truth is that a corporation is a business organization that is OWNED AND CONTROLLED by the people who own its capital slock. All that is required to be come a part owner of a corpora tion is to save up money enough you o't like the way the cor-i porauun u Deing run, you can goih,H ...noii,, to its annual meeting and VOTE AUAiNbX THE MANAGEMENT. If enough stockholders vote against the management, it gets thrown out just as in demo cratic countries government gets thrown out if enough people vole against it. One of the oddly interesting facts l . . . - - ... ? our mg corporauons-wn.cn 'l" t,!Kgenel:allu u"de"l001 " should be is that in the case of very many indeed of our big cor porations the owners (sharehold ers far outnumber the workers The Standard Oil Company 0fPldv'le ,nd were. unable ,0 " Km .r i.ri..i. h.j 1 , the last count available as this is wrmen, nearly i liner, i i.m as ma"V " emP'ee- "'?' f1 Corporation, one of our "d'ls l" rh"th aU,t 5,1per n u ,1. , R40'.Vfihly .the ,same slt,ua 10,n exlst! what Mr. Funston is getting at js tnat if more Df0Die understood lne business of stock ownership here would be more owners of - ' shares of stock, and that would I ibe a good thing. He is suggesting! ,hat lhe wjse and senslnle wav SlUeK III our Ulg, UaSIC lnOUSiriCS you buy unwisely, of course, you will lose your monev. That's the long and the short of it. ment's top echelon handling many 01 lne tou8h international prob lems that will continue to plague me nauon in me itibus. A third important reason could be the increasingly dose Nixon Dillon friendship that has devel nnerl in lha nact fpw mnnlh. nil. Ion's aides confirm that the two men have met frequently and sometimes talked twice daily on the phone. All these talks were objective discussions of foreign policy prob lems, they say, without any move by Dillon to provide Nixon with campaign ammunition to shoot at the Democrats. Dillon is known, however, to be delighted with the stress Nixon put on foreign aid and long-term help to underdeveloped countries in his speech accepting the nom ination for the presidency. Dillon's views perhaps were also visible in Nixon's belated pledge to seek to step up the nation's rate of economic growth in order to keep ahead of the Soviet Un ion's mounting industrial drive. For two years, Dillon was the lone administration voice publicly advocating this, at a time when such suggestions came mainly from the Democrats and New York's Gov. Nelson A. Rockefel ler. Dillon's readiness to champion liberal economic-trade policies, many of them conceived under Democratic administrations, helps explain his popularity with Demo crats. But his main appeal is his low key no-nonsense approach to ques tions asked him at hearings. He gives congressmen a maximum of information and a minimum of diplomatic doubletalk. He backs up his replies with detailed statis tics, facts, and figures. SHIHIIIwill U.S. Airmen, Arrived From Congo'Nuzums Of Tenmile Return c ... II. n i it. im iv From Vacation To California TACOMA (AP) Seven Mc-' Chord Air Force Base airmen who have just returned from the I tongo said at the base Tuesday j they saw no resentment toward United Nations forces in the Afri can republic The airmen were from two of; 17 McChord C-124 Globemasters ! involved in air lifting troops and ' supplies into Leopoldville and evacuating ,ome Belgians and a! iro.i lm0unt of Belgian bouse-1 .nmn U. ni.n, mntt The McChord planes, part of the 62nd Troop Carrier Wins, flew Tunisian, Moroccan and Ghanan left .McChord 20 minutes after be- her home in Anaheim, Calif., aft troops into the troubled central ing alerted last July 19 and flew er spending five weeks at the home African nation recently granted 20,000 to 39,000 miles while on the of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Walt- indeDendence by Belgium. Maj. Jesse W. Perry, 8th squad ron commander and leader of the McChord units involved said they found "only cooperation" among the nations participa'ing in the air lift. The seven officers at a news conference said they were re stricted to the air base at I.eo- for tnemseives now conamons Capt. Warren E. Bowden aid I vanston, Wyo where they were on his flight Tunisian troops who j "lied by the death of his father, spoke no English were unhappy I Bert Hughes .A mere. Angle Claw because they were not the first : n, returned with them for a vis- en rnpra intn I hp Drmpr Heiciani". colonv. There were 69 Tunisian soldiers and a substantial amount of food 'on the huge plane, Capt. Bowdcn ' said. Capt. Bowden said he saw four Russian IL-18 turbo prop trans- , . DIJ HmmmImm nMiaff Extension Request KLAMATH FALLS (AP)-Open-ing of bids for purchase of the Yamsay Mountain sustained yield unit of the Klamath Indian Reser vation drew only a request for an extension of time Monday. Conrad Shelland, sales super visor, opened the single envelope and read its contents to the six persons who had gathered. Steve Williams of Eagle Point requested an extension until Feb. 1 to submit a bid. A bid opening last Jan. 20 on three other units produced a simi lar request for extension of time, which resulted in the units being readverlised for sale. However, following the bid open ing. Earle Wilcox, former man ager of the sales office and now wlln tne Bureau of Indian Affairs at Portland, said the request would be forwarded to the Secre tary of Agriculture for his action. Wilcox said, however: "In the present instance, there is not time remaining to readvertise prior to the date when the secretary of Agriculture is to take over all un sold units." Date for this takeover is April 1, 1961. The three previously readver lised units, North Marsh. Modoc Point and Sycan, have been set for bid openings on Dec. 1. All sustained yield plans for any of these units must be submitted not later than Sept. 1. There are 11 tracts comprising 617,285 acres of timber in the for est ard they have been appraised at 570,353,000. Under the Klamath Termination Act, any timber not sold by next April 1 will be pur chased by the federal government. Washington Counties To Seek Disaster Aid SPOKANE (AP) Federal dis aster aid will be sought for farm ers on the fire-swept Spokane-Lincoln County line by a committee of 50 farmers formed here. Timber, biush and grassland fires burned 35,000 acres in the area last month. Committee officials said tne fed- Oregon gets a bigger dollar re eral funds would be used for re-.rn ;mm ,h fnds expended in seeding rangeland and repair of farm buildings and fences. ports unloading troops from Gha na at Leopolds Ule. Lt. George Leonard said he saw Belgians loading their household goods aboard the Globemasters for the return flight to Europe. It was a pathetic sight to see them loading their old washing machines and other items on the I planes." he said, "many of them had lived there" all their lives Thirteen McChord Globemaste lives." ' hirlaan I . hnrrf L nham,( an still remain in the airlift between i Europe and the Congo and North i Africa. The two planes just returned! airlift. Niece Accompanies Wilbur Pair Home From Wyoming By MAVIS BINTLIFF Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hughes have returned to Wilbur from Reunion Attended Mr. and Mrs Fred Broszio, anddaughler of Mr and Mrs Wavne daughters, Maria and Connie, and ; Gable are spen(iing a week at the Mr. and Mrs. Pat Christie and I Assembly of God Church Camp up children, Chnssy, Freddie, and Lime. River Pat. Jr., drove to Eugene over a Mr an(J Mrs Menzie Lee visited recent weekend to attend the Hill,the,r son and daughterinlaw, Mr. family reunion. Approximately o and Mrs jiarvj Lee, and Mr. members oi me iamny rati i Skinner's Butte Park for their an nual picnic. Work is progressing on a sec ond bus shed and gasoline pump being installed at the Wilbur Ele mentary School by the Ellison Transnorlation Co. Mr. and Mrs. Bin Barry anu.Ko, ; . n.h,,ro ,.iiniini daughters have returned from a week's trip to Boise, Idaho, where Editorial Comment IT'S A VERY BIG BUSINESS Pendleton East-Oregonian The Travel Information Division of the Oregon State Highway De partment has issued a very in formative report on the activities of the agency, which is in its twenty-fifth year of operation. During that period, income to f- l,n ti.., .l "imlnetrv" Uie&UM liuiii inc hb.v. ............ has grown from 35 to 176 millions oi uouars aimudiiY. Lan joruan, uuetiui ui uic piu - gram, has sent with the report a set of reprints and tear sheets from the 1960 newspaper ana mag azine advertising campaign. See ing this colorful advertising ma terial which appeared in many newspapers and magazines, one can readily understand what a com pelling force it is in inducing va- cationers to head for the Beaver State. , , Income from Oregon s tourist industry in 1959 amounted to $176, 000.000 ' being outranked only by the lumber industry and agncul- ture- , , . j Last vear, Oregon celebrated its 100th" birthday and a big ad vertising and promotion campaign was put on to draw attention to the exposition in Portland and many other events throughout the state. Attendance at the Exposi tion was disappointing, lt turned out that during that banner tour ist vear many visitors by-passed the 'Exposition and went to other parts of Oregon. There seems lit tle doubt that the state was great ly benefited by Centennial year adverUsing, aitnougn txpusiuuu attendance did not reflect it. its program to lure lourisis man from any other outlay of taxpay ers money. For an expenditure of about $300,000 for advertising tne state realizes an income of mil lions. Here are some figures com piled by Mr. Jordon which show iho magnitude of Oregon's tour ist business: computed number of out-of-state cars visiting Oregon in 1959. 1.866.610: average num ber of miles driven in Oregon per car, 441; average expenditure per dav. per person, $6.59 average expenditure per day, per car, 10; average expenditure per stay in Oregon, per car, $86.08; computed income to Oregon trom persons traveling by car, $160,677,789: esti mated income trom visitors travel ing by rail, bus and air, $16,000,000. To obtain those figures, the traf fic engineering division of the high way department conducted inter views with outbound vacationists at 17 check stations adjacent to ports of entry. Figures were com puted on all out-of-state licensed vr.hinln. u'hncp firpiinantt were on pleasure trips and spent a day .F inn-.,- in firpi-nn Mr. Jordon and his efficient staff are to be praised for their splendid work on what is undoubt edly one of the most successful tourist promotion programs in the United States. Blood Chemicals Seen Cause Of Mental Ills BONN. Germany (AP) Injec tions of blood from human beings suffering from schizophrenia sent spiders spinning around hopeless ly unable to build their webs, the International Congress of Psychol ogy was told today. Prof. Karl Buehler of Los An geles, honorary president of the 16th triennial congress, in a re port said the experiment suggest ed that chemicals in the blood stream play a major role in men tal illness. Spiders injected with the blood of schizophrenics, he said, be came confused and wound up with a tangled mess instead of the usual symetrical web. By MRS. WALTER COATS i in the care o; her mother who re ,, . x . ..j'cently underwent surgery. She Mr and Mrs. Don Nuzurn ? . ako 'visjled wjth x!r. and Mrs. family have returned to Tenmile K lh Cnri5,opherson and daugh. following a vacation trip to Cah-tcrJ flf Rosebrg They visited Nuzum's brother,!, Mr. and Mrs. George Butts and James, and an uncle and aunt, family of Tenmile have returned Mr. and Mrs. Carl Nuzum, at 'from a two week vacation trip. Rancho Cordova. They also visited his grandmother, Mrs. Mary Nu- zum, and an aunt. Mrs. Virginia mce, at Anesia, Lain, iney lour- ai hnnu a Hprrv farm ann va nneland and spent some time on, the beaches at Newport. Daughter Leaves Mrs. Lyle Robertson has left fori 'er Coats, in Tenmile. She assisted they visited her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Stanton. En route they visited friends in Burns i and Lakeview. Brother Visited Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sands went to Coos Bay recently to visit her brother, Tom Godley, and spend some time fishing. Gary Gable, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gable, and Terri Gable and Mrs. Jav Oakes n Grants Pass last week. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Moore have moved into one of the Holcomb apartments. Eugene Gilbert, and son, Albert and Wilbur Schafer are new residents of Wilbur and are living in the Emmons rental. Gil- j Ashland Trip Taken Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Bintliff and family recently visited Mr. and Mrs. Harold Moses and family at Ashland. The Moses family were former Winchester residents. Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Holcomb of Grants Pass recently brought their children, Hilda and Wayne, to spend the rest of the summer with the latter's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Holcomb. Proposed Satellite Seen As Gold Mine WASHINGTON (AP) A Dro- posed "stationary satellite" would ue a vuiiiuiim iridi guiu mine "" L - iruiu suarpjy cui caarncs iur i sending messages throughout the world This estimate came today from the International Telephone & Tel egraph Corp., which has made de tailed cost studies of the project now planned as a part of the Defense Department's space pro gram. The satellite would be a radio package orbiting exactly at the earth's rotational speed and thus remaining always above the same spot on earth but 22,300 miles out in space. L. Pollack of ITiT told a na tional symposium on global com munications, conducted here by the Institute of Radio Engineers, that, entirely apart from its mili tary values, the project could be a highly profitable commercial venture. One would provide up to 1,000 voice channels in the Atlantic area and link Western Europe, Africa, the eastern United States, and South America, Pollack said. A second would provide 384 voice channels, serving Hawaii, Australia. New Zealand, Japan, the Philippines. the eastern U.S.S.R., New Guinea and Alaska. A third would provide 240 chan nels in the Indian Ocean area. Umatilla Checking Typhoid Fever Clues j PENDLETON (AP) Umatilla I County health officers still are checking possible clues to the source of typhoid fever in the Milton-Freeway area. Dr. Walter P. Browne said his department found that 90 per cent of the private wells in the area are contaminated. Residents of the area are attempting to estab- lish a water district. Browne said, however, the. source of the infection is near the headwaters of the South Fork of the Walla Walla River. Several cases of typhoid fever were reported in MiltonFrecwa ter a few weeks a;4o. Missile Sub Named I WASHINGTON (AP) - The I N'avv will name one of its Polaris i missile submarines for the Mar- quis de Lafayette, the French nobleman who fought in the American Revolution. Hemorrhoids Cuied Painlessly By Non-Surgical Method The non-surgical, electronic method for the treatment of Hemorrhoids (Piles) devel oped by doctors at the Dean Clinic has been so successful and permanent in nature that the following policy it offered their patients : "After all symp toms of Hemorrhoids , . . have subsided and the patient has been discharged, if he should ever have a recurrence, all umntiMiKT y v siica . r , drove througn Montana ana msii- ea renin ej m aim Mr flHU J1I3. tldnc huiu aiiu auu of Artesia, Calif., are visiting friends and relatives in uiana ana Tenmile. They are former Olalla residents. Mrs. Griffith Visits Mrs. Leon Griffith (Georgia Jen nings) has arrived from Pint Bluff, Ark., to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Lockwood, in Tenmile. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Cook and familv of Tenmile and Mrs. David Perron and daughter of Olalla made a short trip to Selma, Ore., recently to visit Mr. and Mrs Charles Cook. William Cook I and Mrs. Perron are a son and daughter of Charles Cook Recent guests at the home ol Mr and Mrs. George Butts in Ten- mile were his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Nelson, of San Gcrnimo, Calif. Idaho Labor Head Charges Goldwater PENDLETON, Ore. (AP) The president of the Idaho State AFL CIO attacked what he termed "union-busting political leaders" today at the Oregon AFL CIO con vention here. President Darrel H. Dorman said Sen. Barry Goldwater (R Ariz.) had once used an Air Force plane to come to Idaho to make an anti-labor address. Dorman predicted that there would be a campaign in Idaho soon to get a so-called right-to-work law. He said such a law was defeated in Idaho several years ago. Web Pressmen's Union 17 intro duced a resolution at the conven tion todav' which recommended that all affiliate unions in Oregon refer to Portland as "the city of scabs" from now on. This was in reference to the eight-month-old Portland news paper strike, where both the Ore gonian and Oregon Journal are publishing with non-union help. That strike also was discussed before the contention by Gov. Mark Hatfield, who Monday crit icized management of the two ; newspapers for refusing to permit him to help end tne aispuie. Deputy Befriends Crippled Child LA PUENTE, Calif. (AP) Two weeks after leaving the bed in which she had been confined for two weeks, Linda Brady hobbled out to a patrol car and went for a ride. Her driver was Deputy Sheriff Bob Shumaker, to whom Linda, 7, started waving six months ago as he drove past on his daily rounds. The exchange of waves led to a friendship which Linda's moth er, Peggy, credits with giving the little girl a will to get well. Linda, suffering from a crip pling bone disease, underwent surgery and two weeks ago was allowed -to get out of bed. But she wouldn't do so until Shumaker was there to lift her to her wheel chair. Monday Linda took her first steps alone to Shumaker's patrol car. SEE PAGE 16 The Toggery BEACH MATS WOVEN GRASS 34'2"x66" SAVINGS with QUALITY PERSONALIZED SERVICE Cor. Mill anil Woodward OR 3-6614 further treatments will be giv en absolutely free." The Dean Clinic hat beed serving the Northwest for fifty years. Their treatment require no hospitalization and does not employ drugs or injections. Write today for a descrip tive booklet, yours without obligation: The Dean Clinic, Chiropractic Physicians, 2026 N. E. Sandy Blvd., Portland 12. Oregon. 25c